President Trump said Friday that the US will drop out of an international arms treaty signed in 2013 by President Barack Obama that was opposed by the NRA and other conservative groups.
Trump told members of the gun lobby at their annual meeting in Indianapolis that he intends to revoke the status of the US as a signatory of the Arms Trade Treaty, which was never ratified by the Senate.
“We’re taking our signature back,” Trump said to thousands of cheering attendees, many wearing red MAGA hats.
The NRA has long opposed the treaty, which regulates the $70 billion business in conventional arms and seeks to keep weapons out of the hands of human rights abusers.
The lobbying group argues it would undermine domestic gun rights, a view the Obama administration rejected.
Trump added that the UN would soon receive formal notice of the withdrawal.
The 193-nation UN General Assembly overwhelmingly approved the treaty in April 2013 and the US, the world’s No. 1 arms exporter, voted in favor of it despite fierce opposition from the NRA.
Trump’s action drew an immediate rebuke from some international human rights groups.
“The United States will now lock arms with Iran, North Korea and Syria as non-signatories to this historic treaty whose sole purpose is to protect innocent people from deadly weapons,” said Oxfam America president Abby Maxman.
Adotei Akwei, of Amnesty International USA, said in a statement: “With this announcement the Trump administration will re-open the floodgates for arms sales with weakened human rights criteria.”
So far 101 countries have formally joined the treaty. Another 29, including the US, have signed it, but not yet formally joined.
Trump was joined on his trip to Indianapolis by White House national security adviser John Bolton, an advocate of withdrawing from international treaties out of concern they might undermine US authority.
With Friday’s announcement, Trump continued his drive to roll back Obama-era initiatives.
Nearly two years ago, Trump announced that the US would withdraw from the Paris Climate Agreement, which aims to reduce global carbon emissions that scientists link to harmful climate change.
Republicans argue the economy would suffer if it met the deal’s carbon reduction goals.
In May 2018, Trump pulled out of a 2015 international deal that eased sanctions on Iran in exchange for strict limits on Iran’s nuclear activities. The United States has since reimposed some sanctions that had been suspended under the deal
With Post wires



